InFlux is a puzzle game that mixes exploration and puzzle platforming in a series of beautiful natural and abstract environments. You are a mysterious metal sphere which falls from the sky, traversing an apparently deserted island dotted with cubic structures of glass and steel. Each glasshouse is a puzzle to be solved.

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“The music is perfect, the visuals are nice…everything just comes together beautifully.”
Indie Game Magazine

“It’s a game that has a clear principle of design behind it, supported by almost idyllic aesthetics”
Screen Shaped Eyes

“While exploring the island, the player triggers certain changes, some of which are potentially unexpected.”
Objectively 7.5/10 – Objective Game Reviews

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About This Game

InFlux is a puzzle game that mixes exploration and puzzle platforming in a series of beautiful natural and abstract environments. You are a mysterious metal sphere which falls from the sky, traversing an apparently deserted island dotted with cubic structures of glass and steel. Each glasshouse is a puzzle to be solved.

Key Features

Sit in a comfy chair and become as relaxed as you have ever been while playing a video game

Solve a series of mind-bending cubic puzzle structures connected by...

A series of beautiful, naturalistic hub world environments to roll around

The entire time I spent playing InFlux, I kept wondering to myself and trying to discern just what about it was causing me to dislike it so much. But ultimately it became clear that there was no one thing that was so abhorrent as to destroy the game, but a long list of mediocre mechanics, frustrating moments, and missed potential stacked upon each other to create a game that is not fun to play.

And you really wouldn't notice this from the outside, so much is the subtlety of InFlux's deeply permeated problems. What appears to be an average, but solid physics based ball puzzle game is instead a amalgamation of poor design decisions and tedious level designs.

The most easily called out of these issues is the sluggish and clunky controls of your ball. There is such an absurd amount of momentum attached to movement that it's nearly impossible to retain any control even when moving slowly. It's as if there's a second invisible player playing beside you which constantly wants to go in the opposite direction, and you are left to try and wrestle control back away from them as you try to move forward with anything resembling precision.

This of course bleeds into the actual puzzle designs, which naturally require excessive amounts of control and constrained movements in order to complete, something which is nigh impossible given the previous paragraph. Compounded upon this is the astounding amount of tedium built into each and every puzzle, often placing you back at the beginning of long sequences for the slightest mistake, and making completion feel like a brief relief before you're put right back into an even more aggravating level. There's nothing clever or satisfying to find here, just an abundance of cheap failures and unrefined design.

This finally ties all the way back around to the clash of styles presented with the presentation. The game is split into two parts: that of navigating a realistic, occasionally rather pretty world ripe with nature, and that or completing the actual puzzles in a sterile white box floating somewhere in the cosmos. The transitions are glaring and abrupt, and turn the parts of the environment that are actually interesting to look at into little more than glorified conduits to carry you from one stale puzzle to the next. This isn't to say the overworld (for lack of a better term) is actually a compelling place to explore, as it feels as barren and underdeveloped as anything in the game, but in comparison to the drab color pallet of the puzzles at least presents an occasional bit of eye candy to counteract the monotony of constantly being in the same room.

There might have been some point where InFlux was coming along into something decent (I'd like to think so at least), but if so something went terribly wrong at some point and sent the entire game careening down the crapper. No matter how hard I tried to enjoy it, every single moment I spent with it was nothing but dull and frustrating, leaving me feeling like the game was just waiting for me to give up on it so it could roll over and die like the lifeless creation it is.

After compelting the second puzzle-cube I must have exited out of the wrong side of it, because the game locked my progress. I could no longer enter the cube (there were not enough 'blue orbs' left to activate the torch), I could not get around the cube. After jumping into the ocean the game reloaded me back onto the wrong side of the cube; my progress was completely haulted.Up until this point I found the game boring and full of perplexing design decisions. More than half of my time investment consisted of "non-game" elements: rolling the ball through long boring forest corridors, collecting blue orbs with no explanation, no decision-making, and no challenges to be found. I can't comment on the difficulty of the puzzle elements because the game broke on me so early, but what I experienced was a frustrating camera and somewhat janky controls. The two puzzles were uninteresting.1/5

I loved the game concept; I've had InFlux on my wish-list for ages, and finally got it from Humble Store 2 days ago.I'm a little upset at some of the issues I've had so far though :|

There is lag, which is ridiculous. I'm playing it on 800x600 and normally I run games at much higher resolution with zero issues.

The flash when you get into a puzzle or out of it, is pure pain. I had to emphasize that, it's just that bad. I hate sudden full screen flashes in games, and have left many games as a result of them, if there is no way to dim or remove them, I will not bother any further.

And the worst issue of all was, if I get a puzzle that takes longer than a minute to solve, I get nauseated, might sound like I'm exaggerating, but I am not. I get a headache and feel sick...

The visuals are decent, but everything else is bad. I really wanted to give up on this game mid way, but I was hoping something interesting would happen. I completed the game after 5 hours and was very disappointed. I felt it was tedious, boring, and pointless. You just move a ball around through the world and complete short mini puzzles that are a slight variation of the same thing every time.

The puzzle levels by themselves would have made for a decent puzzle game, but the lush overworld that ties it all together, and provides a sort of action/adventure game on the side make this a must-have indie title. Graphically sound, tight controls, fun while it lasts. Not too much replay value though.

I really want to enjoy this game, serious, but after I had reached to middle I'm tired.

- first, dev still trying to help, it's good news, but...- game crashing often, not for everyone but more people are have this problem. It could be "UDK stop working" or "run out of video memory"- optimization is poor, I had off all effects, changed to lower screen resolution, but game still shuttering- it's hard to control ball, you just can't feel it- problem with collision system, a couple of time I get out of map or ramp- orb (important things) could get stuck and it's hard to get them out- checkpoints don't work too good- before I wrote this I have been in underground and air flow must send me to next cave. It's always sends me to central where are blockade, and one time when I didn't fall I was trying to jump in, but I found invisible walls

The main problem with InFlux is that it doesn't matter that you're a ball. Rolling physics games, like Marble Madness, rely heavily on conservation of momentum as a game mechanic. InFlux does not. You have very good control over your movements and can arrest your forward momentum at any time.

Moving slowly often makes the uneven ground difficult to traverse, but that's more an annoyance than a gameplay mechanic. There's no incentive to dash madly through levels, not in the least because you spend the navigation levels searching for hard to spot motes of light that you need to unlock the next puzzle.

The game has some ramps, but you don't so much roll up them as you hit them at speed and bounce into the air. Once the game introduces the boost mechanic all semblance of ball relevance goes right out the window, as you can use it to easily turn on a dime at tight angles and even essentially freeze time in mid air to target perfect landings. Overshot your mark? No problem, just boost again and turn yourself around.

There are some puzzles that involve rolling a ball into a receptacle but that ball is not you. It's a different ball. And you don't manipulate it by hitting it like a cue ball or a bowling ball -- you have telekinetic powers. These puzzles would have been much better if you were the "scoring" ball and the game actually forced you to behave like a ball.

But instead, InFlux is just a mediocre first-person puzzle game with some reasonably pretty landscaping that is in no way relevant to navigation by a ball. You might as well be a tiny person with a gun that fires attracting and repulsing waves -- in fact, I have definitely played games where I was a person and my momentum was more difficult to control than it is in InFlux. At the end of the day you are a character with a motor skills deficiency trying to solve spatial puzzles. The net result comes across as unfortunately frustrating.

It's obvious that the developers put a lot of work and care into this, but it suffers badly from some poor design choices. I can't in good conscience recommend it to anyone but the most diehard of spatial puzzle fanatics. I definitely don't recommend it to anyone looking for a ball physics game.

The gameplay is also fun and casual, but by the end, I felt a deep and lingering sense of attachment to the ball, the whale and the setting - despite the lack of dialogue or any obvious displays of narrative. It may be the fact that the ball had no way to communicate and no one to communicate with, and must therefore keep the experience of its journey internalized throughout the game, that you feel for it more: the silent protagonist. But this feeling may depend on the sensitivity of the player.

Another point of praise goes to the soundtrack, which was beautiful, relaxing and fitting to the game.

Technically, the game was sound, with some areas left for improvement. The camera reaction to world collisions can be jarring, and coupled with the strong motion blur used by the game, may cause a few people eye strain or motion sickness. Loading models sometimes caused momentary pauses in the middle of gameplay; and jumps in model level-of-detail are sometimes incongruent.

I've played this game for 4 hours, and I still don't have a clue what it's about, or if I'm anywhere near an end, or even a middle... I love it!

InFlux is a neat, relaxing game where you take control of a small metal ball and do pretty much two things: 1. roll around looking at the pretty environment devoid of any other presence despite obvious signs of previous haitation and even civilization, and 2. roll around in giant glass houses where you push buttons and guide other objects to goals to move on to the next area.

While exploring this strange place, you'll find small lights that you can attract to follow you, and you need to gather at least 3 in each area to unlock the glass house for that region; I think this is brilliant, since it gives an excuse to explore the gorgeous landscape while breaking up the pace of the puzzling glass houses and still giving an excuse to go slowly through the game.

You'll also get access to abilities as you progress, like being able to push or pull some objects, charge up a speed boost, and slow down time for more precise manuvering; these add a freshness to the play, and the speed boost specifically can be used to pull of some really amusing tricks, including jumping over/on top of mountains or clipping through walls. in the short time I've played, I even managed to find a relatively large skip in the game using a clip in one of the early glass houses, which really appeals to the speedrunner in me.

For some negatives, if you're playing on a laptop more than maybe a year old, you'll probably experience some slowdown or lag, which for me is a pretty important issue. Additionally, as far as I can tell, there isn't really a point or story in the game; that might not be a bad thing, and maybe later in the game I'll learn something about why I'm alone in this big world and the complete absence will make sense, but for now, it's just a bit of a bother to me. finally, while the controls are fairly easy to use, it does take a bit of getting used to, and momentum plays a major role, meaning hairpin turns aren't feasible, and you'll have to constantly modify your speed and direction to keep going even in a straight line, a problem that's just compounded when you factor the environment filled with slopes, bumps, rocks, logs, and even just uneven ground.

Now the positives, first and foremost, the beautiful atmosphere! Your journey takes you through fields and mountain passes, caves, small villages, mountains, beaches, and A FREAKING VOLCANO! Combined with the very mild and unobtrusive audio, the experience is one that I'll probably remember for quite some time. Speaking of the audio, the backround music is faint and plesant, even in the glasshouses where it changes, it only serves to set a mood, and it does very well. Even the sound effects are simple and quiet, which is a major plus for me. The puzzles in the glass houses are also very well done; you are introduced to new mechanics slowly to give you time to understand each new concept and play with it for a while. You can press a switch to turn the entire room on its side, get blown up by a giant fan to a higher platform, be launched by a catapult, and tons of other things that will take up too much space in this already lengthy review to go into detail about. And having mentioned the controls in the negative section, I feel like it's only fair to mention that they are always fair. You'll never feel like the ball was just ignoring your input, and you always have plenty of room to move around so the tiniest mistake won't ruin your progress.

So tl;dr - I would definitely recommend this game. $10 isn't asking too much, and I think it's well worth it for the experience you get. If you're okay not having a ton of direction, you want something relaxing and calm, you don't mind thinking a little, and you apreciate beautiful things, you can't go wrong checking this out.

This is a very relaxing, easy going exploration and puzzle game. The puzzles are just enough to make you think but not enough to stump you. The exploration has very gorgeous setpieces and scenery. The soundtrack is alright and the controls are good, but not stellar. That can really be a blanket statement for the game as a whole: "good, but not stellar". Still, I'd recommend it if you can pick it up for a couple of bucks.

This is a rather long review, so if you just want a brief summary of why I recommend this game skip to Results and read from there.

Impromptu Games creates a fantastic puzzle mystery which keeps the gears in your brain continually grinding. InFlux offers a serene ambience with melodic music that produces a peaceful environment that is calming.

Campaign:Influx is the story of a small ball and its adventure to complete mazes, explore an island, and collect orbs. You must collect orbs in each area in order to unlock the maze that allows you to progress to the next section. The island continually grows as you progress through this amazing campaign and the emptiness keeps you wondering at every turn. I completed the game in about 3-hours, which means it’s not a very long game. You could spend more time exploring the landscape although because of the poor mechanics of the protagonist exploration can seem rather annoying at times.

Ambience:The rhythmic music and simplicity of Influx creates at times a very peaceful experience. The game offers a very vivid environment without any traces of even the simplest story. Without a story to follow Influx produces something most games lack, answers. I found myself continually wondering why there were empty houses on the Island, how the modern maze structures formed, why I was even solving the puzzles, and the list goes on and on.

Gameplay:The protagonist, a small ball, is able to roll and boost in order to accomplish tasks. There is no point where this character can jump, but by using boosts correctly you can launch yourself into various places. An interesting feature behind controlling the character is that you can boost while in mid air allowing you to change direction. Boosting also slows down time which allows you to gain a view of your environment while deciding how to act in a fast paced situation. Although there are time where controlling the character can be tricky the overall experience is relatively easy.

Results: If you like puzzles, modern graphics, beautiful scenery, and melodious music then this would be the game for you. Despite there being more cons than pros I would recommend this game, but only if you can find it on sale for at least 75% off. InFlux is a short, but very riveting puzzle game. If you are a fan of puzzle games then this is the game for you.

Cons:-Poor controls (can be annoying to control the protagonist)-Lack of explanation-Listed control to boost, but doesn't unlock till half way through the game-Attract ability can be infuriating as it forms an orbit rather than just pulling an object to you. -Too short of a campaign

Very relaxing, very enjoyable. The zen vibe is palpable. Aided by a cool soundtrack, chill atmosphere, and beautiful landscape even at lower settings.

For some reason I had trouble installing it, but once I got it working it was totally worth it.

It's largely free roaming exploration and it's quite easy to understand what to do due to it's simplicity.

Due to how enraptured I was into the game, it was actually a little shorter than I anticipated. It could really benefit from an additional level or two under a different kind of landscape, like perhaps a snowy tundra, a space level, or a man made system of some kind.

Still if you need to relax, but you also want to have fun while doing it, then I highly recommend this game.